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A GUIDE FOR VISITORS AND BEGINNERS

For visitors and beginners the hardest part of starting out is knowing
when, how, why and where. Faced with the immensity of Harray or the hundred
miles of sea trout shoreline, the inexperienced angler can be forgiven for
feeling more than daunted.
The following chapters will attempt to put such anglers on the pathway to
success. This is a "starter pack" which won't contain every detail,
but the enthusiastic and energetic angler will soon fill in the spaces

If you would like to email Jim Adams through the web site
contact form he can put you in touch with some local ghillie

Click on lochs to view larger map

From the Bank: The best bank fishing, or wading as it is known locally,
is generally at the beginning of the season from March until the end of
June. From July onwards, the bulk of fish can be expected to be offshore
and mainly out of range of even the deepest wading angler. The exception
to this rule would be Stenness, of which more later, and last light and
first light forays everywhere in mid-season.
The principal mistake that southern bank anglers make in Orkney is that
they do not cover enough ground. Rainbow trout are fast moving creatures,
and if you stay in the same spot long enough every fish in the pond will
swim by you. Not so wild brown trout - to catch more than one you will generally
need to keep on the move. Locals employ a "step & cast" approach,
never dropping the flies in the same piece of water twice.

In the early months - March & early April - feeding fish will be found
in very shallow water (6" - 18" deep) and it is often counterproductive
to step in the water. As the water and the days warm-up the fish will spread
out over the shallows, staying within casting distance of knee-deep water
until late June.

The best big Orkney wading lochs are Harray, Stenness with Hundland and
Swannay bringing up a poor joint third. Harray has large areas of shallows
where wading anglers can ply their trade - Josey's bay, Bankhead Bay, Merkister
Bay, Nistaben, Ballarat, Kirk Bay are reckoned to be the best of it. Stenness
is a loch where the fish are bound to the shoreline. Theoretically, Stenness
should be the easiest wading venue, but the fish can be remarkably fickle.
This is due, in no small part, to the fact that the loch contains brackish
water, with the neap & spring tides emptying & filling the loch
with Atlantic water on a fortnightly basis. Many locals are Stenness fanatics
but they expect a large number of blank trips to make up a years outings
on this tricky water.

Hundland can supply good wading, but do take care - some of the loch's
deepest holes are within feet of the shoreline. The extreme northern &
southern ends are best. Swannay can also be tricky as the rocks which make
up its bed can be remarkably slippery - a good place for tungsten-studded
waders. Fish the Dale Shore on the northern shoreline for best results.

As regards tackle, floating lines in the shallow waters should suffice,
and wet flies or nymphs will do the trick. Have a few dries and emergers
tucked away for that evening when the midge (non-biting) are hatching or
the cow dung flies are coming down on the water

Boat Hire on Orkney Lochs

Recently we have been receiving a number of enquiries regarding boat hire
on the Orkney Lochs. Over the past few seasons the number of local land
owners making boat hire available has decreased probably due to the rising
costs involved in offering this service.
Local OTFA members in general do not hire out their own boats, engines and
equipment but a few local anglers offer a ghillie service with boats and
motors on all the lochs but again do not advertise and rely on word of mouth.
The aforementioned if by far your safest option and should guarantee excellent
boats, motors and fishing – but comes at a price.
To our knowledge the following are at present hiring boats on our lochs: